Low Background Gamma Spectroscopy at the Boulby Underground Laboratory
P.R. Scovell, E. Meehan, H.M. Ara\'ujo, J. Dobson, C. Ghag, H. Kraus,, V.A. Kudryavtsev, X-.R. Liu, P. Majewski, S.M. Paling, R.M. Preece, R., Saakyan, A. Tom\'as, C. Toth, L.M. Yeoman

TL;DR
This paper details the performance and sensitivity of three low-background germanium detectors at the Boulby Underground Laboratory, enabling high-precision radioassays crucial for rare-event physics experiments like dark matter searches.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive characterization of BUGS detectors, including corrections for cascade summing, and demonstrates their capabilities in detecting ultra-low radioactivities in various materials.
Findings
Detection sensitivities down to 0.3 mBq/kg for key isotopes.
Ability to identify equilibrium breaks in uranium decay chains.
Effective probing of X-ray fluorescence for isotope identification.
Abstract
The Boulby Underground Germanium Suite (BUGS) comprises three low background, high-purity germanium detectors operating in the Boulby Underground Laboratory, located 1.1 km underground in the north-east of England, UK. BUGS utilises three types of detector to facilitate a high-sensitivity, high-throughput radioassay programme to support the development of rare-event search experiments. A Broad Energy Germanium (BEGe) detector delivers sensitivity to low-energy gamma-rays such as those emitted by 210Pb and 234Th. A Small Anode Germanium (SAGe) well-type detector is employed for efficient screening of small samples. Finally, a standard p-type coaxial detector provides fast screening of standard samples. This paper presents the steps used to characterise the performance of these detectors for a variety of sample geometries, including the corrections applied to account for cascade summing…
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